Cindy Lee’s “Diamond Jubilee”. It didn’t come out in 2025 but I don’t think I heard it until earlier this year. It’s a fantastically inspiring piece of work that has lit a renewed creative fire under me.
“I Saw the TV Glow” Again, it came out in 2024 but I don’t think I got to it until this last spring. It has become one of my favorite films of the past 20 years at least. Wears its influences tastefully while still being utterly unique in tone and tenor.
Tony Molina “On This Day” We had a wonderful tour with Tony and Lightheaded this fall, and the new album is absolutely gorgeous. Tony is a masterful songwriter and guitarist.
Lightheaded “Thinking, Dreaming, Scheming” Good pals of ours who just happen to make some of the best guitar pop on the planet. Cynthia’s songwriting reminds me of Linton’s in a lot of ways, with these beautiful, sometimes baroque arrangements and harmonic structures, and Stephen’s lyrics are really evocative and often really moving.
Cassie Ramone “Sweetheart” Cassie G’s new album is absolutely stunning. She’s a real one.
Massage “Coaster” Another wonderful slice of dreamy guitar pop mastery. Great folks, great band.
Time Thief “Time Thief” Our Providence pals put out this terrific and way too short album this year. RIYL Weirdo pop.
James by Percival Everett Could have been a high-concept slog in lesser hands. I mean, much…. lesser hands. Everett is one of the greatest living writers.
• first and foremost, our beautiful cats who brighten every minute of every day: ribbon, marlys, and maybonne
• the ida / tsunami coin toss tour, which brought me to tears of joy and then fits of laughter (usually at dan’s endearing stage banter)
• tortoise playing with the chicago philharmonic, and the way their collaboration transformed songs i’ve known and loved for decades (sending wishes into the universe for a live album release in 2026?)
• ‘we’ll prescribe you another cat’ by syou ishida
• the lonely island & seth meyers podcast
• the nooworks gentilhomme collection, which reminds me of curtains i had in my childhood bedroom
• cherished time with the mazzucco/watling family in san diego back in the spring
• the ruth asawa retrospective at SF moma
• seeing scrawl for the first time ever, not once but TWICE this year — after being a fan for 30 years
finally, our wonderful friends — thank you thank you thank you
Having Rob and Amelia from Heavenly drive the band around England, showing monolithic stones and yo-yo tricks to Adam, Cynthia, Madison, and I for a week straight.
My one afternoon with Mt Misery in Glasgow made my whole year worth it.
Late night hangs with Kenji and Adam at Kenjis flat will hopefully replay on my deathbed, I will never forget falling asleep on Kenjis couch to some of the best music I had never heard.
The incredible hospitality of Emanuel, Jeremie, and Hadrien in Paris, and walking out to open our show to a completely packed and sold out Supersonic.
Rachel Love giving me a Dolly Mixture cd in Brighton made me cry almost immediately upon delivery lol
Releases
Aside from all the excellent slumberland releases, like the ones from our tourmates Jeanines and Tony Molina, I listened to the new records by these bands a lot (in alphabetical order!)
Gail O – chickfactor editor in chief Nina Nastasia at Show Bar
Stuart Murdoch book event and solo set at Polaris Hall Michael Hurley Memorial at Cherry Sprout
Gina Birch at Mississippi Studios
Saint Etienne – International Sharp Pins – Balloon Balloon Balloon
Brian Bilston and the Catenary Wires – Sounds Made by Humans
Jeanines – How Long Can It Last
Edith Frost – In Space
Destroyer – Dan’s Boogie
Mei Semones – Animaru
Horsegirl – Phonetics On and On Edwyn Collins – Nation Shall Speak Unto Nation
Marissa Nadler – New Radiations
Robert Forster – Strawberries
Telephone Numbers – Scarecrow II
Dean Wareham – That’s the Price of Loving Me
William Tyler – Time Indefinite
The Real Tuesday Weld – Crow at Christmas
Flinch. – Misery Olympian
The Clientele – Violet Hour on vinyl
Salem 66 – Salt
glo-worm – glimmer on vinyl
The Motorcycle Boy Peel Session
Railcard – Railcard EP John Roseboro
Shouting Out Loud: Lives of the Raincoats (Audrey Golden)
Teenage Daydream: We Are the Girls Who Play in a Band (Debsey Wykes)
Futsal
Soccer City USA
USWNT
The American people saying HELL NO to this shit
Portland, Oregon – deserves the Nobel Peace Prize
A tough year even beyond the kakistocracy shitshow. I hated missing Sarah Cronin’s wake, YLT Hanukkah, Dromfest/Salem 66 songs, and a few other things, but it is what it is. RIP, Sarah and Shay
Franklin Bruno
It’s been decades since I listed, much less ranked, my top records of the year; I discover or rediscover so much older music through reissues or just crate-digging that I’ve stopped distinguishing past and present as a listener. But I can tell you about 24+ excellent shows I saw in 2025: two per month, roughly one rock/pop/“indie” and one jazz/improv/experimental, plus a few outliers. (NYC unless noted.)
Eljin Marbles, The Pick-Ups, Girls on Grass; Sanger Hall, 1/18
Susan Alcorn; Zürcher Gallery, 1/21
The Love Hangover (about 15 artists doing 2-song sets); Berlin Under A, 2/15
Lesley Mok/Lester Saint Louis/Craig Taborn: Bar Bayeux, 2/26
Angela Niescier/Tomeka Reid/Savanna Harris: Jazz Gallery, 3/12
Sloppy Heads; Main Drag Music, 3/14
Nels Cline Consentrik Quartet; Le Poisson Rouge, 4/14
Ida, private show, Laurel Canyon (CA); 4/27
Pomona College Balinese Gamelan; Bridges Hall of Music (Claremont, CA), 5/5
Robyn Hitchcock, Emma Swift, Philosophical Research Society (L.A.); 5/14
Sam Newsome/Anthony Coleman/Brandon Lopez/Nick Neuberg; Bar Bayeux, 6/18
Bug Club, Omni; Bowery Ballroom, 6/26
Mekons, Johnny Dowd; Bowery Ballroom and White Eagle Hall, 7/17-18
Matt Mitchell, trio w/ Kim Cass/Ches Smith, and solo; The Stone, 7/16 and 19
Tie: Open Hand, Landowner, Editrix; Union Pool 8/9 and Sable, Room de Dark, Sotto Voce; Bar Freda, 8/22
Gabrielle Stravelli Trio; Mezzrow, 8/12
[Wild Card: Lucinda Williams, Wilco, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson; Jones Beach, 8/1]
Haircut 100, Chao; Sony Hall, 9/24
Cecile McLorin Salvant w/ NY Philharmonic; Lincoln Center, 9/25
Stereolab, Dorothea Paas; Brooklyn Steel 10/2
Sullivan Fornter/David Virelles/Kris Davis; Jazz Gallery, 10/4
[4-way tie]
Anthony Braxton, Composition No. 101 and Syntactical Ghost Trance Music, Roulette; 11/5
[Ahmed], Billy Steigers; Cafe OTO (London), 11/12
Ed Kuepper & Jim White, Mick Harvey; TV Eye 11/17
Tiers de Familia, The Scene Is Now, Deerfrance; Francis Kite Social Club, 11/22
Jonathan Paik/Shogo Yamagishi/Max Nguyen; Close Up, 12/14
Stephen Prina, For The People (of New York), and w/ David Grubbs; MoMa, 12/4 and 12/13
I can’t really list shows I played myself, but I have to put in a word for the absurdly talented people I made music with in 2025: my bandmates in The Human Hearts (Bob Bannister, Pete Galub, Matt Houser); Tsunami, our touring partners Ida, and onstage guests including Richard Baluyut, Clint Conley, Kate Pierson, Sally Timms, and Bob Weston; Laura Cantrell and the States of Country band (Jeremy Chatsky, Kenny Kosek, Mark Spencer); Beth Kaplan (of Salem 66) and Chris Brokaw. Career — no, lifetime — highlight: sitting in with Scrawl (Union Pool, 9/1) to play keyboards on Magazine’s “Song From Under the Floorboards” with Scrawl (Union Pool, 9/1).
• the 30+ sparrows who gather beneath my window every morning for black sunflower seeds – ever thankful
• recording and then performing with Wilie Aron, Emily Wittbrodt & David Nagler at The Bitter End
• the FolkEast Festival – such a generous vibe…meeting Sandy Denny’s daughter, Georgia…playing with Jon Wilks… hanging with Diana Matheou… and in the company of my daughter and niece
• attending a Brooklyn Cyclones baseball game
• playing The Chapel, SF, and McCabes, Santa Monica, during the April tour with Evie Sands and her stellar band
Sarah Cronin – Sarah’s death cast a large shadow over an already shadowy year, terrible and unfair and a huge loss… I suspect this won’t be the only time she is mentioned in this year’s lists, as is only right and proper.
Poker Face – Columbo meets the Littlest Hobo starring a live action version of the girl from Brave, and who could ask for anything more. It’s great!
New music from old bands – Pulp! Stereolab! Allo Darlin! All still wonderful and so much easier than hunting down new bands that sound a bit like them… and new Heavenly next year too!
True Grit Texture Supply – essential and ubiquitous brushes, tools and effects for your graphics package – have spent a LOT of fun hours playing in that sandpit this year
Plumbers- this year I found a good, reliable, affordable plumber and heating engineer- cannot be overstated.
Sade – I love Sade.
Biscuits – yes, biscuits – they are brilliant, especially the cheap own brand ones – what are your favourites? Drop a couple of packs into your basket next time you go for a big shop, and treat yourself when you get home – you deserve it (unless you are a fascist, a billionaire, or a POS PUSA – then you don’t)
Gilmore Tamny (Weather Weapon, The Mystery, The Yips)
These are things that interested and engaged me this year, which I’d recommendo. Some of them came out in 2025, some of them I just discovered this year. No particular order.
TV
Who Hired the Hitman
The Lowdown
Hacks
The Diplomat
Unknown Number: The High School Catfish
Heated Rivalry
An Update on Our Family
Pokerface
Mo
The Task
The Righteous Gemstones
Devil in the Family: The Fall of Ruby Franke
The Pitt
MOVIES/SPECIALS
The Perfect Neighbor
Deaf President Now!
Taurasi
Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery
Fairyland
The Wedding Banquet
Come See Me in the Good Light
The Baltimorons
PostMortem, Sarah Silverman
Why Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl Halftime Show Is America, Josh Johnson
Happy Gilmore II
Sorry Baby
The Secret Agent
MUSIC/LIVE PERFORMANCE
oof I need to listen to more music, BUT songs I found and liked very much this year and a few live shows:
Manchild, Sabrina Carpenter
Hold On, Ngozi Family
Denial is a River, Doechii
Chappell Roan generally
Scrawl
Ben Hersey, Non-Event show
Major Stars release show for More Colors of Sound
Ravon Chacon performance, ICA
SOCIALS
TIKTOK
· abbey.joselyn
· doggystylinguk
· kobimcnutt
· nicoleolived
· noodyxbums
· ship_spotting_
· journeyofjackson
· yoleendadong
· dpeezy2099
· oceanscary4K
· notoriouscree
INSTA
koreydior_
olya_with_squirrel
african_brutalism
PATREON
Christine Mcconells
The Cottage Fairy
YOUTUBIO
Broadway Barbara
That Practical Mom
Red Squirrel Studios (for cat enrichment–top notch)
BOOKS (all audiobooks FWIW)
The Unfinished Harauld Hughes, Richard Ayoade
Spent a Comic Novel, Alison Bechdel
The Dead of Winter: Beware the Krampus and Other Wicked Christmas Creatures, Sarah Clegg
Birnam Wood, A Novel, Eleanor Catton
History Lessons, Zoe B. Wallbrook
We Solve Murders, Richard Osman
Heartwood, Amity Gage
Vera Wong’s Guide to Snooping (on a Dead Man), Jesse Q. Sutanto
Generation Darkness, Elizabeth Hand
King of Ashes, S.A. Cosby
Margo’s Got Money Troubles, Rufi Thorpe
Sociopath, Patric Gagne
Rental House, Weike Wang
Havoc, Christpoher Bollen
Creation Lake, Rachel Kushner
Perfume and Pain, Anna Dorn
Glory Daze, Danielle Arceneaux
PODCAST
The Rest is Entertainment (I listened to nearly every single episode)
The White Pube
Crissle’s Couch
The Art Angle
Waldy and Bendy
Grits and Eggs Podcast (have not kept up but love what I heard)
Darknet Diary (selective listening but some NUTS stories)
Ed Mazzucco & Laura Mazzucco (Shelflife Records, Tears Run Rings, Autocollants) Our new kittens Diego & Mo (pictured above)
The Autocollants Reunion
Japan vacation
Highspire “Crushed”
The Cords
Quickly Quickly “I Heard That Noise”
Stereolab “Instant Holograms On Metal Film”
The Blue Herons “Demon Slayer” single
Vinyl Williams “Portasymphony”
Teenage Daydream book
The Umbrellas are proud to present our top 5 most played songs of tour. Various songs we’ve either heard at gas stations or just can’t seem to get out of our heads. Ever wonder what we are listening to driving up to the gig? It’s likely one of these here tunes.
1) J^ke – “this is what falling in love feels like” (2021)
2) Leikeli47 – “Girl Blunt” (2018)
3) Rascal Flatts – “Life is a Highway” (2006) , but we should mention Tom Cochrane’s original holds a place in our hearts
4) Rich Gang – “Lifestyle” ft. Young Thug, Rich Homie Quan (2014)
5) Chris Lane – “I Don’t Know About You” (2018)
Alicia Hyman (Jeanines)
The new Tony Molina record (On This Day) and touring with Tony Molina and Lightheaded
The Cassie Ramone record from 2024 (Sweetheart)
Biscuit and Heidi (my cats!)
Road tripping with Rob and Amelia (Jeanines/Lightheaded UK tour this past summer)
The End of Romance – Lily Meyer (Feb 2026)
Constantly – GG (graphic novel)
Frannie Choi poetry
My friends Zoë and James and their band Time Thief
Kendall Jane Meade – Photo: Jimmy Pham
Kendall Jane Meade
Best Movie: Train Dreams
Best Live Shows: Hannah Cohen, Oracle Sisters, The Ladybug Transistor, Mekons, Peter, Bjorn & John
Best Tour Memory: Visiting the Frank Lloyd Wright museum and Historic District in Chicago
Best Book: Nice Girls Don’t Win by Parvati Shallow
Best Doc: It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley
Best Reason To Release An Album: I made my album SPACE to process complicated feelings around my divorce, but the best part of the process was that it led me back to growing and nurturing my musical community (not to mention my chops).
Best Songs Of The Year: “Long After Midnight” by Flock of Dimes, “Elderberry Wine” by Wednesday, “My Full Name” by Madison Cunningham and every single song on West End Girl by Lily Allen.
Glenn Donaldson (Reds, Pinks and Purples)
Music continues to be the only thing worth your time…some 2025 gems:
Vulture Feather – It will be like now
Maxine Funke – Timeless Town
Necks – Disquiet
Husker Du – 1985: The Miracle Year
Swiz – Complete Discography
Dania – Listless
Obscuress – Maltha
Christina Carter – Like a Bayou to its Gulf
Drunk Elk – Clear Skies in Effect
Matthew Smith Group – S/t
Caroline – 2
Scrabbled – Plough through the Rust
Lois Maffeo
January – Alan Sparhawk dancing and spinning around at the end of his show in Seattle. Physical release to begin 2025!
February – Listening to List of Demands LP by Damon Locks
March – Singing Strumpet with The Linda Lindas in Seattle.
April – Yo Yo A Go Go panel discussion at Evergreen. Recognition of some hard work that was disguised as magic-making.
May – Listening to the DJ Game radio show on KVMRx.org. DJ brothers Thom and Greg Moore astonish one another with wild hits.
June – Whales came to the Olympia end of the Salish Sea!
July – 25th anniversary of The Transfused – a panel discussion at the library on the queer rock opera conceived and produced in Olympia in 2000. Hear the prophecies of the anti-trans, oligarchical 2020s? I do!
August – Making a real time birthday playlist for a special person. Just call out the songs and hit play!
September – Watching Kicking Giant start their set at Northern Sky Festival by summoning a thunder storm!
October – Portland Frog! (And listening to When Boys Cry by Selector Dub Narcotic.)
November – ASMR Dumpling Making Theater in Tacoma by artist Yixuan Pan
December – Mark Robinson’s astonishing setlist. Hydroplane!
Mark Robinson solo show set list (from Portland). Photo: Adam Possehl
Paul McCartney Photographs 1963-64, Eyes of the Storm – a beautifully curated and deftly installed exhibit with about 250 photographs by Sir Beatle. The exhibit is as much about photography as it is about a young man making documentary souvenirs of a trip to America where he coincidentally is the center of attention. Even if one wasn’t a Beatles fan, this is worth seeing. There’s also a book of these photos, entitled Eyes of the Storm as well, which was published in 2023, and one I bought at that time. It was a delight to see the photos enlarged, sometimes to the size of an entire wall! A large part of why I enjoyed this so much is that the photos are from 1963 and 1964… the cars, the clothes, the buildings – all with such individuality and character.
Here are 10 records from 2025 that I listened to A LOT and enjoyed for various reasons. Heavy on the “friends” aspect as it is mostly people I know or have worked with, and artists I have loved my entire life, so their records are like old friends.
Life Death and Dennis Hopper – The Waterboys
The Melancholy Season – Benmont Tench
Horror – Mekons
Dear Life – David Gray
Horsegirl – Phonetics On and On
Neil Young – Oceanside Countryside
Patterson Hood – Exploding Trees and Airplane Screams
Joan Jett & Billy Idol are introduced by Pleasant Gehman on his first visit to Los Angeles in May 1978, promoting Generation X and their recent signing to Chrysalis. Joan was already a punk rock icon as a member of the Runaways. Idol is talking to Pleasant as Joan looks on. Photograph: Theresa Kereakes
Best things of the Year were:
seeing Amy Rigby in a dive bar in the afternoon, playing acoustic and reading from her book. It was like a high school reunion, and her first book was about her journey from her PA home to NYC, and this one is about her journey from NYC to Nashville, where I live, and where I saw her perform. It is a delight to see a woman of my own generation (she and I are a year apart, age-wise) still doing it DIY and making a real good go at it – AND marrying her punk rock dreamboat to boot.
seeing Billy Idol and Joan Jett on tour together. They have been pals since my punk rock best friend and I introduced them in 1978 and them touring together is the Best Thing of the Year because I feel like my misspent youth has made a material impact on the world. Billy did all sorts of promo celebrating the wild party we threw for them! He is still in good voice. Joan Jett is still a badass, and I enjoyed her ranting from the stage about how we have a hateful White House. When she sings “Everyday People,” I know she means it. She too is in good voice.
getting a last minute invite to see Booker T. Jones play in a church converted into a performance space. Another old familiar fave but, as he said, he’s 81 years old. He’s got a lot of stories. He played “Green Onions” about the 4th song in. He didn’t jerk us around. He delivered in church, playing organ, piano, AND guitar and singing.
And that’s all I can remember without looking things up, so it’s the memorable best of my year!
Band T-shirts are pretty much the only clothes I buy these days, apart from when essential items completely wear out and have to be replaced.There are many advantages to buying band T-shirts, and here are some of them:
-you can usually get them at gigs, which means you don’t ever have to visit clothes shops.
– the bands benefit, as the sale of one T shirt is worth about 6 billion streams of their songs on S p o t I f y. (By the same token, T shirt sales don’t help finance AI-based warfare.)
–socially, you might be at an advantage wearing a band T shirt, because other people who like the same band might talk to you. Actually, they probably won’t talk to you, because that would be awkward.But some kind of unspoken solidarity might hover in the air.
For me, the main advantage is that I do really love these shirts. Each one has memories embedded in its fabric. They are like diary entries, reminding you of something you don’t want to forget.
So here are my favourite band t-shirts of 2025. Most of them were acquired over the last twelve months but there are a few older specimens in there too.
HARD SKIN.I bought this at the Hard Skin Ladies Night a couple of weeks ago, where a dozen punk-adjacent women joined London’s finest Oi band on stage for a thrilling and raucous hour.Sean, the lead singer, had taken refuge at the merch stall at the end of the gig and sold me the shirt before being dragged back to the stage for a stupendous encore of ‘If The Kids Are United’.
THE MAGNETIC FIELDS.This might be my oldest band T shirt.I bought it when ‘69 Love Songs’ first came out, and I wore it again this year when Stephin and his group came back to London and played the songs from the album all over again. I’ve worn the shirt on my many occasions in between these two significant dates, and I have to give credit to the band for making such a durable garment.The only negative thing about this shirt is that it’s an ‘L’.The modern 69 Love Songs shirt that I bought more recently is an ‘XL’.The old shirt reminds me that I should have eaten less over the last 25 years.
TULLYCRAFT.I got this shirt when Heavenly and Swansea Sound played with Tullycraft in their hometown of Seattle.They hadn’t played for ages: I guess we infected them with the idea that there is no reason not to resurrect your old band, even if it seems a little undignified.And of course, they were brilliant.And they were dignified.Their songs are timeless, and so is this T shirt.
HOMESPUN FESTIVAL.I was given this shirt by Bob (Swansea Sound), who had helped organise this DIY festival in Rochester, Kent back in 2016.The shirt is actually about ten years old.Bob had stowed the merch away somewhere and only recently re-discovered it in a box in his attic and let me have a couple of the shirts.The Catenary Wires had played the festival, along with bands like The Claim, Pete Astor and Bob himself.Back then, me and Amelia shared a stage with loads of people who we didn’t really know at the time, but who would later turn out to be very good friends. That’s quite a nice story for a T shirt to tell.
RAMSGATE MUSIC HALL.My favourite venue in Kent, actually my favourite venue in the whole of the UK, makes a new shirt each year to raise funds.I can’t remember who designed this one – they have a different guest designer each year.But I like the idea that by wearing it I am making a tiny contribution to the maintenance of the Music Hall.Like most independent venues, it’s run on a shoestring and driven by a genuine love of live music.Without it, people in Kent would be much, much poorer.
WASTED YOUTH.This is my most fraudulent T shirt.I loved this band when I was very young.Their two early singles ‘I’ll Remember You’ and Jealousy’ were two of my favourites.If you like the Only Ones and are quite interested in Bauhuas but could live without their Gothic affectations, I recommend Wasted Youth.Anyway, they played this year at The Ramsgate Music Hall.I couldn’t go, because we were playing a show on the same night.But kind Al, who did sound at the Music Hall, got the shirt for me.So yeah, a bit fraudulent, but I do love it.
TULPA.We put this band’s debut album out in the Autumn of this year.Have you heard them?If not, you should.How can I describe them?Imagine if Dinosaur Jr decided to record pop songs with a female lead vocalist…Something like that.Anyway, it’s been great to get to know Josie, Dan, Mike and Myles and to hear their wonderful music. The sleeve design and the shirts they made were all pretty marvellous too, and here’s a picture of Amelia wearing her shirt.Mine is currently in the wash, so I can’t wear it right now.
THE LINDA LINDAS.We became friends with this band because of T shirts.When The Linda Lindas first started they asked if they could adapt the Heavenly ‘Attagirl’ design to make shirts that they were printing to raise money for a local charity.We said yeah sure, not expecting them to become a world-conquering indie rock band.We’ve now got into a bit of a rhythm with them, where we do occasional T-shirt swaps.That’s how they came to be wearing Riot Twee shirts, and that’s how I came to have my own Linda Lindas shirt.
THE CORDS.This wonderful band have made a big impact on us in 2025.Their debut album, as everyone knows, is a total delight.The band, along with their Mum and Dad (Lou and Marc) have become close friends after we spent a wonderful week travelling round England with them on their first headline tour south of the border. Marc gave me this shirt.Like all The Cords merch, it’s a lovely piece of design, and I am proud to wear it.
SASSYHIYA.If you have heard the Sassyhiya track ‘Crayon Potato’ you will know that Helen and Kathy, Sassyhiya’s songwriters, are very much in love with their cat, Crayon.Not content with writing a very good song about him, they also made a T Shirt that celebrates his furry existence.He is a magnificent beast.I haven’t encountered him in real life and maybe that’s a good thing: it’s never wise to meet your heroes.The song and the shirt will have to suffice.This picture was taken at the Skep Wax Weekender back in July, where me and Helen effected a T shirt swap.A nice memento of a great weekend.
Photo of LD from Gail O’Hara’s 2012 photo book which LD designed
It’s been 5 years since LD Beghtol passed away and since then his friends, former bandmates and collaborators have been wanting to pay tribute to him. Now it’s finally happening. His former bandmate in Flare, Charles Newman, will release the tribute album ALL THESE THINGS I THOUGHT I KNEW on his label Mother West. Linda Smith was also the driving force behind getting this thing to come to fruition. LD would have been 61 tomorrow, Dec. 13. Read the press release below.
cover art for All These Things I Thought I Knew – Artwork by Nick Moore / @nicholasmooreart
LD BEGHTOL COMPILATION TRIBUTE ALBUM All These Things I Thought I Knew will be released in April on Mother West
Album To Feature Renditions of Beghtol’s Songs By Linda Smith, Julia Kent, Stephin Merritt (The Magnetic Fields), Jon DeRosa (Aarktica) and Charles Newman, Kendall Jane Meade, Dudley Klute, Moth Wranglers, Stephen Coates (The Real Tuesday Weld) and Doug Hilsinger among others.
LISTEN TO JULIA KENT’S JUST-RELEASED TRACK, “EPHEMERA” HERE.
December 12, 2025; Los Angeles and Everywhere Else: Today, we announce the upcoming release of All These Things I Thought I Knew, a compilation tribute album to LD Beghtol, his life and music.
The announcement falls a day before what would have been LD’s 61st birthday and circa the 5-year anniversary of Beghtol’s passing. The album, slated for an early spring release on Mother West, will feature an enviable array of artists who knew, were inspired by, and collaborated with the artist who passed away tragically in December 2020.
Beghtol is, for many, best known for his role as one of the lead vocalists featured on The Magnetic Fields’ now classic album 69 Love Songs, having voiced heartfelt tracks like “All My Little Words” and “The Way You Say Goodnight.” But LD was a creative force and a prolific artist in his own right, leading the NYC chamber-pop outfit Flare, and all its subsequent incarnations, for over a decade, as well as releasing music under various other monikers like LD & The New Criticism. He was also a part of the experimental pop duo Moth Wranglers and TMF offshoot The Three Terrors.
In addition, LD worked as an art director for the Village Voice and wrote about pop culture for Chickfactor, as well as for Time Out New York, The Oxford American, The Advocate and the Memphis Flyer, his local paper for a time.
Beghtol’s passing inspired friend and singer-songwriter Linda Smith to connect with his former Flare bandmate and producer Charles Newman with the intention of compiling a tribute album of his songs.
Says Smith, “This album is a different kind of tribute album. It is a tribute to a musician by other musicians who knew and/or worked with him. Where other tribute albums may contain versions of well-known songs covered by artists who did not personally know the songwriter, the songs of LD Beghtol are not well known. Those of us included on this album wish not only to remember a friend and collaborator, we also hope to make these witty and memorable songs better known to a world too long unaware.”
Newman follows, “LD and I made so much music together and played some great shows. I learned a lot from him about music, art and history. My connection with LD deeply shaped the art I make and the way I approach it. His influence will forever live on in my work.”
All These Things I Thought I Knew features renditions of LD Beghtol’s songs by artists Linda Smith, Julia Kent, Stephin Merritt (The Magnetic Fields), Jon DeRosa (Aarktica) and Charles Newman, Kendall Jane Meade, Dudley Kludt, Moth Wranglers, Stephen Coates (The Real Tuesday Weld) and Doug Hilsinger among others.
“I loved him dearly: he was kind, witty, brilliant, unique soul, who felt things deeply but carried them lightly,” says the aforementioned Kent who is a revered cellist and composer. “His music was beautiful, baroque, acerbic, and heartfelt, like LD himself. It was always a joy to see him and chat about everything, from art to books to mutual friends and enemies. Being with him sometimes felt like being in another era: a more amusing and civilized one. He was an unbounded spirit and leaves an outsized hole in the world.”
Kent’s instrumental track, “Ephemera,” to be released tomorrow, December 13th (LD’s birthday) was inspired by the artist himself, and is one of the three original works featured on the tribute album along with a track composed by Stephen Coates (The Real Tuesday Weld). Coates’ song was originally written for LD to voice, and is now finally brought to life by Martyn Jacques of The Tiger Lillies. The third original track is the Stephin Merritt remix of Flare’s rendition of “Celebrate The Misery,” a song by Seattle band Kill Switch… Klik.
All These Things I Thought I Knew’s first single, “If/Then,” a Beghtol composition, was recorded for the tribute album by Jon DeRosa and Charles Newman was released on LD’s birthday in 2024 to mark the launch of this project. DeRosa, who has released music for decades as Aarktica, and like Newman, was a member of Flare, but was also a longtime roommate of Beghtol’s. It was in their Bushwick railroad apartment that Beghtol first shared a primitive version of “If/Then” with him so many years ago.
“In my mind, ‘If/Then’ is the quintessential LD song,” muses DeRosa. “Everything from its elegantly majestic arrangement to its lyrical brutality and vulnerability seems to bear his fingerprint.”
Consider every dollar you spend a vote for the world you want to live in: a better world is possible and we must keep pushing for it. That means avoiding corporations (or spending very little this year for many on a budget) and awful retail giants who pay no taxes and pay their employees so little they can’t make a living. Our guide focuses on community, creativity, mutual aid, supporting artists, musicians and writers, and encouraging gratitude, kindness, empathy and giving back.
GIVE THEM EXPERIENCES: Sign your friend up for kickboxing classes, give them season tickets to a women’s futbol team, a spa day, or take them out to dinner, a play, an art-house movie, time in a recording studio, ceramic lessons, or pasta-making classes. Book a treehouse getaway!
NATURE IS HEALING: There are many ways to support animal welfare, bird safety and wildlife thriving, along with giving humanswhat they need to survive in this stupid world: Head to Audubon, Wildlife Conservation Society, Save the Manatee, Oceana, the A C L U, and other do-gooders and buy things that benefit them! Also consider adopting a real-life rescue pup or a black cat or buying things that benefit animal sanctuaries, hummingbirds, bees, bats, and wildlife. Without pollinators, our species will not survive. Give seeds to grow food, make bat boxes, hummingbird feeders and give someone beekeeper classes! I don’t know anyone who doesn’t need a massage right now.
KEEP THE LIGHTS ON: Support your fave radio station like WFMU by grabbing a bucket hat, a hoodie from top labels, or even buy your loved one a public media subscription. Commission an artist or buy something they’ve already created or a photographer to take a portrait. Shop museum and gallery shops, independent book shops, small businesses, and of course record shops! (We like Jigsaw, Monorail, and Dusty Groove a lot, along with our wonderful stockists Atomic Books, Grimey’s, K Recs, Record Grouch, Sonic Boom, and Peel).
MUTUAL AID: If you want to buy nothing, that makes a statement but consider ways to invest in our communities, support artists, writers, musicians, photographers, makers, ceramic artists, record labels, small publishers, camera shops, food co-ops, farmers markets, help people eat, get the care or services they need, and donate to food banks near you if you can.
IT GIRL: The Life and Legacy of Jane Birkin The real queen of England finally gets a proper bio from an author who once wrote about chickfactor and other zines in the New York Times:
The first comprehensive biography of Jane Birkin—actress, singer, and legendary style icon—and her profound cultural impact, from the “acerbic, culturally astute, and genuine” (The New York Times) author of the instant New York Times bestseller Glossy. (Simon & Schuster)
“The first full-length history of the Shangri-Las, one of the most significant—and most misunderstood—pop groups of the 1960s.
Sisters Mary and Betty Weiss, together with twins Mary Ann and Marguerite Ganser, were schoolgirls when they formed the Shangri-Las in 1963, and had a meteoric rise to fame with songs like “Leader of the Pack” and “Remember (Walking in the Sand).” Their career was cut short for reasons largely beyond their control, derailed by the machinations of Mafia-linked record executives, and heartbreak and tragedy followed. Historian Lisa MacKinney marshals an impressive array of new evidence to tell the Shangri-Las’ story, dispelling many myths and long-standing mysteries along the way.” (Verse Chorus Press)
“John Davis understands that revolutions start at home. His reverent analysis of DC punk zine history, “Keep Your Ear to the Ground, is a sobering call of support for local, DIY culture. John’s book is definitive, well researched, and highly recommended.” —Bruce Pavitt, author of Sub Pop USA, cofounder of Sub Pop Records
“Art is a weapon and as deadly as steel cannons or exploding bombs. Art should not be pacifist nor mystic, but should send fighting people to the field of battle filled with the clear knowledge of what the real enemy is,” according to Woody Guthrie, a great American. The Guerrilla Girls have been busting down doors for decades doing the work required to highlight gender discrimination and income inequality in the art world. Now your kiddo can learn how to be a superfeminist and an artist!
This stamp set is great for anyone looking to get a feel for letterpress. Hatch Show Print has been a working letterpress studio since 1879! I wish I lived closer, I would be there all the time.
Snoopy Boombox Retrospekt just keeps refurbing and making things everyone would totally want. Via Moma Shop:
Features of the Retrospekt Snoopy Boombox include:
Powered by the included traditional plug-in power cord or by four D batteries (not included)
AM/FM/SW radio
Cassette play and record
Bass and treble adjustment knobs
Two built-in X-bass speakers
Headphone out 3.5mm audio jack
Bluetooth® connectivity to phone or wireless device
Track to track and play/pause controls for Bluetooth® connected device
With handle up: 7h x 14w x 6”d and Handle down: 5h x 14w x 6”d
The red telephone is not just a classic banger from Arthur Lee and Love, it’s also a product that I would love to hold up to my ear when I chat on the phone like an old person! From Moma:
Features of the Native Union Retro Pop Phone include:
Fun, retro phone handset design.
USB-C compatible with smartphones, laptops and tablets.
High-quality microphone and speaker for clear calls.
“This how-to guide for electric guitar beginners covers all the basics: tuning, chords, scales, solos, and all the other fancy-pants stuff you need to become the next Joan Jett, Jimmy Page, or Mary Timony. No ‘tech talk’ here, just good old-fashioned tricks of the trade and easy to follow diagrams.” (buyolympia)
Risotto Studio Calendar at Little Otsu We love Risograph prints and this limited edition hanging wall calendar from Glasgow’s Risotto looks smashing! Twelve months of fun colors, lunar phases, and this year’s featured language is Dutch so you can also learn the days of the week and how to phonetically pronounce the months. Risograph printed in Scotland on recycled paper. White wire binding with a hanging loop, comes in a plastic sleeve.
If you’ve ever been to Chapel Hill, chances are you’ve seen a Ron Libertiposter, the kind you want to own after you see it. Our Triangle correspondent Gavin O’Hara sat down with the artist-musician-poster designer extraordinaire to catch up in advance of his new art exhibition opening Nov. 5 at Peel Gallery:
I can vividly remember the day I met Ron Liberti. It was late summer 1992 and I had just moved to the venerable college town of Chapel Hill, North Carolina. I was 25 and in search of my people. I wandered into the Hardback, a left-of-center bookstore and cafe. Ron was standing behind the bar wearing a cardigan and a rumpled white t-shirt. He greeted me with a smile that seemed both menacing and kind. I chatted him up, ordered the first of many $1.25 iced coffees (free refills!) and settled into a place that would become the center of my life.
With the benefit of hindsight, I like to think Ron was an ambassador put there by some higher power. Our friendship developed and the Hardback became my portal into a remarkable town with a weirdly compelling history of Southern subversiveness. There were artists, musicians, aficionados, weirdos, runaways and castoffs who knew this was the only place for miles around where they could truly become themselves. It was breathtaking. The town’s core identity still endures to this day but it’s different in a million ways too. Thankfully, Ron Liberti isn’t. Turns out he’s an art lifer. (Images courtesy of Ron Liberti and Michael Galinsky)
Poster by Ron Liberti
chickfactor: What was the best thing about growing up in New Jersey? Ron Liberti: One best thing is tough. The food (pizza, pork roll egg and cheese on a hard roll, diners). I had lots of friends in my little neighborhood, that was pretty great, playing sports in the street, running wild, riding skateboards, fucking around, all that fun kids stuff. I had lots of relatives up north Jersey. My parents’ brothers and sisters were cool but my grandparents’ brothers and sisters – especially on the Italian side – were awesome. Uncle Dominic, Uncle Sally, Uncle Vito, Aunt Millie, Aunt Annette all turned me on to great stuff: Sinatra, listening to baseball on the radio, being a sharp dresser, the joy of a good tomato or nice ripe fig, Tony Bennett, letting me drive their Cadillac’s and Lincoln’s (under age) and them just being cool old people really made an impression on my young soul.
Once I moved down the shore I really got into skateboarding/surfing and the whole boardwalk/beach culture and that’s where I got turned on to punk rock, girls, drink and drugs, ya know, pushing boundaries and basic juvenile delinquent behavior. The close vicinity to Philly and NYC was cool and fun too. It was not uncommon to hop a bus to the big town for an afternoon or skip school to go see Van Halen at the Spectrum. I also took offense to NJ’s reputation with the rest of America. All they see is the industrial wasteland from Newark Airport to Manhattan, but people that actually live there know how beautiful and diverse it really is. It’s called the Garden State after all and some of the greatest artists, athletes, musicians and upright citizens are NJ natives. I’m proud to be from NJ and, even though I chose to leave, I’ll always love it. It formed who I became and I’m forever grateful I grew up there. It’s in my blood.
Poster by Ron Liberti
Tell us about high school Ron. Were you popular? Did you find your people at school? I know you played soccer. You mentioned you started to recognize your art talent around then and started to find solace, camaraderie and inspiration in music as well–how did all that impact you? I liked high school a lot. Not necessarily my classes, except for art and gym, but I was pretty good at the social part. I had many friends and a variety of them too. I was able to hang out with the jocks (I played soccer, basketball and baseball), the cinders (I cracked them up, was able to keep up with them on the party front and loved classic rock like the Who, the Stones, Neil Young, Led Zep, Sabbath, Pink Floyd) and the freaks (always interested in alternative music like the Cure, Echo and the Bunneymen, Violent Femmes, Ramones, Devo, Cramps, R.E.M.).
Art and living the art life was on my radar from an early age. I found being in art class, surrounded by open-minded, forward-thinking, interesting people doing their own thing made me feel like my true self and I wanted to keep feeling that way. Some of my best friends to this day are people I met at Toms River High School North. Go Mariners!
Poster by Ron Liberti
It’s 1986. Paint me a picture of being an art student at Montclair State College. It’s like 10 miles from Hoboken and Manhattan—you must have been on fire. What vivid music or art memories do you have from that impressionable age? Mudflap haircut, hanging at the art building, going into Manhattan for museums, art openings, dive bars, drinking 40’s out of paper bags, going to shows and other exciting events. Maxwell’s was an integral part of my college life, we went there all the time and I saw some of the greatest shows of my life. Being so close to the stage, as opposed to nose-bleeding for Van Halen or Pink Floyd at the Spectrum, completely blew my mind. The Feelies, The Gories, Dino Jr, Bongwater, Alex Chilton. Too many to name, but seeing and feeling these bands really set me on my path.
I was also a radio DJ at WMSC, which I loved doing and turned me on to all sorts of new music but being so close and tuning in to WFMU, that then was at Upsala College in E. Orange, really influenced me by turning me on to more experimental sounds and aural experiences that expanded my knowledge and possibilities of thoughts and sounds. They played talks by people like Alan Watts and Terrence McKenna, all kinds of sound collages, John Cage, Harry Partch, outsider sounds by the likes of Jandek and Daniel Johnston, Half Japanese and good ole punk rock! FMU turned me onto Superchunk. I went to check them out at Maxwell’s and again the next night at the Knitting Factory….a year(ish) later I was living in Chapel Hill. I also have to shout out all the killer oldies stations up there which I also loved, especially WNEW. I especially dug Dion, Francis Albert Sinatra and Elvis Aaron Presley, Buddy Holly, Gene Vincent etc.
Poster by Ron Liberti
You had a UK and Euro adventure in 1988. What was in your tapedeck at that time? What did you eat? What did you drink? What did you wear? Were you fashionable? We listened to The Smiths, R.E.M, Billy Bragg, Jesus and Mary Chain, Jonathan Richman, Pixies, Galaxie 500. We ate mostly potatoes, which we had delivered to our cold and janky flat. We drank coffee, tea, pints of beer and snakebites (half cider, half lager). We dressed like art students straight out of Central Casting: mudflap hairdos, mostly black clothes and thrift store cardigans, many layers. Stinky and awesome were we. I thought I was fashionable. I got laughed at less in the UK than by the guidos in N.J. who didn’t think twice about throwing out a “hey faggot” or some other clever quip. I got over that shit quickly and, luckily, in due time I found many more kindred spirits in Chapel Hill.
chickfactor was involved with this one! Poster by Ron Liberti
Back in Montclair, you started Love Onion with future PIPE bandmate—and Durham chef—Dave I.T. Was that your first band? Did you step up to the mic right away or were you playing other instruments? Yes, Love Onion was my first band. I had played trumpet in elementary school and got my first guitar in high school, which I messed around with but ultimately pawned to go on a roadtrip to New Orleans. I scored another one from a dumpster in college when I returned from England, about the same time as Love Onion started, and was more inspired to play, mostly by my talented new friend David Alworth, who also showed me some basic chords and how they work together. I got a big muff and made mostly noise but was hooked. I played guitar on a couple Love Onion songs but really bonded with Pete and Kathy, the other two singers in the band, we sounded good together and cracked each other up. It was fun and entertaining and I think people liked it. I personally didn’t like my voice very much so it was nice to have buffers. I really wanted to be the Bernie Taupin of the band but they weren’t having it. Once I got my stage chops I felt more comfortable, then it kinda took over and the next thing you know…
Poster by Ron Liberti
Did Love Onion really play on WFMU? Yes! I have the tape around here someplace. It was the first time we really heard what we sounded like and what we were saying. We really dug it! We were also part of a Thomas Edison tribute record FMU put together. We did a song we called “Hair Cigar,” which was about a story someone heard about Edison rolling cigars with hair in them as opposed to tobacco to fuck with his workers who were stealing his real stogies. My art life and music world collided at this point and I started making posters for our shows. My future was coming into focus.
Poster by Ron Liberti
I love asking people this even when I’m not interviewing them—how did a nice boy like you end up in Chapel Hill in 1991? What are your first memories of the place—like, what captivated you? And what kept you here after that initial thrill wore off? In 1989 Dave I.T., a couple other friends and I took a road trip to Graceland and on our way back to NJ came to visit Mike Kenlan, who had moved down a couple years prior. We knew Mike from Montclair. We all worked at the same used bookstore where “books are good” and he was a fan of Love Onion which meant a lot coming from such a badass. He was living in a cool ass house on Carr St, screened in porch, nice yard, walkable to downtown and the Cradle and paying less than I was paying to live in a small apt. above a liquor store in NJ. It was springtime too, one of those days where the red buds just started blooming and people were outside, frolicking, partying, hanging and seemingly happy to just be alive. Meanwhile back in NJ it was still freezing cold, big piles of black plowed snow not even close to thawed…fuckin’ brrrr.
Through Mike we also knew about the supportive and awesome music scene. He had sent us a mixed tape with Zen Frisbee, Metal Flake Mother, Polvo, Superchunk etc, which I wore out. Chapel Hill—its people and energy—really charmed me and made a great impression. The hook was in. After graduating with a degree in fine art and a minor in film I soon realized I was gonna have to be a bartender, or get some sort of job to make ends meet. Remembering the wonderful time we had in Chapel Hill, the cost and ease of living, plus the music and weather….and honestly looking for a change…next thing you know Dave I.T. and I are loaded and rolling, heading south towards our new home and destiny. As much as I knew I was gonna miss my dear friends and family I was excited and nervous but felt confident in the move. I think we both were thinking maybe grad school, but once I settled in, got a job at the Hardback Cafe (where I made some of the best and longest friendships of my life including yourself) and started working on music, making posters and helping to book bands it all came into focus. Next thing you know it’s 34 years later and luckily I still love what I do.
Poster by Ron Liberti
For people who weren’t there, how would you explain what the Hardback Cafe meant to our mini-generation in that moment? The Hardback was a fantastic hangout, meeting place, live venue, half-bookstore, half-coffee shop restaurant that employed all sorts of musicians, artists, students, local lifers, hipsters and slackers. It was an invigorating and inspiring place to be, playing backgammon, nursing iced coffees until it was beer o’clock, usually around 4 or 5 pm. Dreaming, scheming and planning for a better tomorrow. Drinking, thinking, loving and learning. I miss that place all the time and still feel fortunate and thankful to Jamie McPhail for giving me a job and Alvis Dunn for teaching me how to be a good bartender, better citizen and stand up Chapel Hillian. You totally got it, all of it, and I knew from the first time I met you that you were a good egg and one of us.
Poster by Ron Liberti
It wasn’t long before I saw you do your thing onstage. I’ve had love affairs with a lot of Chapel Hill bands over the years but I have only one favorite and it’s PIPE. ThatBall Peen EPis a lost classic and you guys said more in a 12-song, 21-minute live show than the rest of us said in our whole lives. How the hell were you always able to streamline your songs into such powerful statements? Not tons of people got into us over the years but the ones that did really dug it so I knew we were doing something right. I guess we always try to keep it concise, everyone giving their all, emoting our feelings with a blast of energy and honesty. And once we get it out, if done correctly, no need to dwell on it.
Photo by Michael Galinsky
Your shows in recent years are just as impactful as ever. Surrounding myself with such incredible musicians in PIPE (David Alworth, Mike Kenlan and Chuck Garrison) really inspires me to try my hardest and give it my all every single time we hit the stage or write a song. I literally could not do what I do without them and feel lucky and honored to have shared a stage and made those records with them for all these years.
Photo by Michael Galinsky
Side question: you once jumped off the stage of the Local 506 and landed on me, dislocating my shoulder. I am still waiting for an apology. Thoughts? Holy shit! I’m so sorry about your shoulder, my friend! I’ve said it before, I really turn into a different person when I hit the stage with PIPE. The energy and sound takes over and I just have to get it out! It’s not quite a blackout but it is a blur. I think I’m such an upstanding citizen (at least I try to be) because I’m able to release whatever built-up tension has accumulated in my life, therefore I don’t need to be walking around screaming at people for whatever bullshit they lay on us. And it’s not all anger, we have a blast doing it and hopefully that comes across more than just being pissed off about everything. We are definitely not that. And guess what? Someone wants to re-release Ball Peen in 2026, woo hoo!
Poster by Ron Liberti
OK, enough music and townie banter! Let’s talk about how you started making posters for bands and how, through some miraculous unseen artistic process, raised it to an art form. Where did it start and how did you go from getting weird with photocopy machines to creating these more complex works of art? I started making posters when I was in college for Love Onion. We all met in the art department and the band included a couple fantastic illustrators who also did artwork for the band. I think that’s one reason I was drawn to cutting and pasting/collaging for the ones I worked on, not only to have a different vibe than the others I really enjoyed the spontaneity and hand made quality of cutting and pasting, using scratch on letters and messing around with the type was also something I really started getting into. I think studying art in college really helped me in understanding things like composition and color, which I just applied to my poster work, and started using the poles and kiosks as my art galleries. So is it art? I think of them as art, disposable and inclusive, for the people!
I’ll always be grateful to [Cat’s Cradle owner] Frank Heath for giving me so many opportunities to hone my skills as a poster maker. He’s never told me what he wants the posters to look like, which really let me have fun with my imagination and creativity, simultaneously making sure the poster was doing its job as an advertisement. I just wanted to make him, and the band whose poster I was working on, happy with the final product. The fact that he kept on asking me to do more only encouraged me, and to do it better. His taste in music and skills as a club owner also gave me the opportunity to work with some of the best bands of my generation. Also inspiring me to produce work that matched the quality of music coming through the Cradle, and still does. Thanks Frank!
Poster by Ron Liberti
I have always loved how your art drips with pop culture references, skewers conventions and lifts me from the real into a bananas Terry Gilliam-like world of its own. The “punkness” I get from it is the way it questions everything. It’s like it’s naturally suspicious. Is that a fair take? How much of this is intended and how much of it is just your identity spilling out? I think your take on my work is fair and I appreciate the insight. Terry Gilliam was definitely an influence (humor), along with DaDa (cut and pasted juxtaposition of ideas, type and images to tell a story or convey a feeling), Pop Art (subject matter, screen printed medium, pop culture), the psychedelic poster artists of S.F. in the ’60s (hand lettering, strong fun color).
Poster by Ron Liberti
Where else have you picked up new techniques over the years as you grew into your craft and expanded your palette? I really liked the film poster work of Saul Bass (keeping it simple, really messing around with type to tell a story) and punk posters of the 70s and 80s (fucked up and photocopied). Some of my contemporary poster people whose work I respected and was inspired by are Art Chantry, Seripop, Zeloot, Dale Flattum, Print Mafia, Mat Daly, Matt Hart, Dead Meat Design, Tannis Root and many many more. I guess I take all of those influences, plus my love of beautiful black and white film, plus growing up on the boardwalks of NJ and all of the hand-painted signage, my love of music, a little bit of humor, a little bit of art knowledge, a little bit of storytelling, sprinkle in an ad man, give me a deadline and now you have one of my posters.
Poster by Ron Liberti
Growing older ain’t all bad. In the early ’90s, you were a scruffy young miscreant making off-puttingly weird concert posters. Now you are a distinguished artist with hundreds of your works featured in UNC’s Southern Folklife Collection. What the hell! At what point did you realize the lasting impact of your work and is it enough to sustain you in your down moments? I feel I’m just one of a long line of graphic designers telling stories about bands and happenings via the art of the poster. I’m lucky enough to live in such a supportive and vital music and art environment that I’ve managed to have enough work over the years to really hone my craft and am honored that places like the Southern Folklife Collection have acknowledged my work and included some of it in their incredible collection. I’m especially glad that future people will be able to physically touch my posters, which is a much different experience than looking at them on one’s phone.
Poster by Ron Liberti
I always cringed at the term “music scene” or, even worse, “scenester.” It sounded shallow and cynical to me, like people trapped in a meaningless pose. I deliberately started using the word “community” in conversations around Chapel Hill long ago and I stand by that. This community I landed in—and the hundreds of bands and clubs I’ve worked with—have inspired me to be the best, consistent and creative artist I can be. It’s given me my life and how I live it and I’ll be forever grateful for that.
Photo by Michael Galinsky
With the benefit of hindsight—and with your upcoming PEEL show in mind—I can now see that people like us are ART LIFERS and true believers. Not “scenesters.” What has the art lifer community you’ve been a part of for more than 30 years meant to you—or even given you—over time? Being an art lifer means being lucky enough to find something you love to do, and doing it all the time for a long time, not for the money but for the feeling of being part of something bigger than yourself and sharing your skills with others to make this place, and our situation here, better and stronger and smarter for future art lifers. And as far as dedicating this new batch of work … I’m no spring chicken and have been looking back at all the work I’ve done, and the people in my life that have come and gone, some of them now gone forever, and wanted to take a breath and work on new stuff with their spirit and vigor in mind … so I can start my next chapter, making art and music and new friends and colleagues along the way.
Brand-new work from Ron Liberti will be on display at Peel Gallery in Carrboro, NC starting November 5 and running through December 7. Ron will also appear at an opening reception on November 14 from 6–9 p.m.
Last week marked the release of Debsey Wykes’ new book, Teenage Daydream: We Are the Girls Who Play in a Band, and we were lucky enough to publish an excerpt from it on our site. If you’re reading chickfactor, you probably already know that Debsey is one of the greatest living singers. In addition to forming Dolly Mixture with Rachel Bor and Hester Smith, she also sang with Saint Etienne and made fantastic music with Paul Kelly as Birdie. Here is a new interview with Debs about the book-writing process.
Dolly Mixture, 1982: Debsey, Hester and Rachel. Photo by Elizabeth Hollingsworth
chickfactor: What made you want to write a book/publish your diaries?
Debsey Wykes: When I was twelve years old, everyone in my class was given a copy of the Diary of Anne Frank to read. It was 1972 and the Second World War was still fairly recent history, especially for our parents who would constantly reference it, so the story felt fairly tangible and everyone was captivated. We all began our own diaries in earnest but I suspect most of the other girls gave up after a few weeks. I loved filling up notebooks and no doubt dreamt of one day being published. By the time we had formed Dolly Mixture the idea of sharing any part of my diaries would have been unthinkable!
It was only years later, as other people began to reference the band as an influence or ask me about the group, that I began to re-visit that part of my life. I had reached an age where I felt very strongly that I needed to try and make sense of my formative years. It was time to make sure we didn’t end up as a footnote in someone else’s story. Other female bands who had formed in our wake seemed to be getting a lot of attention and I was determined that we should not be overlooked.
Debs by Paul Kelly
How did it make you feel to go back and read them when you first did?
Debsey: The diaries had been living in a battered old suitcase for years, and each time I moved house I would have to haul this ever expanding monster around with me, literally carrying around the baggage of my youth. I had never bothered to read them before but when I finally decided to write the book and confront my younger self I was often mortified! There were a couple of times I threw the diary against the wall in exasperation. Having already committed to the ‘project’ however, I decided to press on, and after cringing my way through endless stories about school, exams, parties, boys, gigs and arguments with my mother, I eventually began to accept that younger self.
What are some examples of how you might have remembered something differently from Rachel or Hester?
Debsey: I’m sure the three of us have completely different versions of the Dolly Mixture story. It’s a long time ago and we’re bound to see shared events from our own personal perspective. Luckily, for the book, I had the diaries to lean on and jog memories but some do fall between the pages. Several years ago I was chatting with Hester and Rachel about how we were lucky not to have been on the end of any physical harassment. We certainly faced a lot of verbal abuse and spitting but I felt we had managed to avoid too much lairy behaviour. Hester then pulled out a polaroid of the three of us – taken in the late 70s – grinning at the camera as a middle aged man attempts to grope me! It seems I must have blocked out some of the more unpleasant aspects of male behaviour while growing up in the late seventies and early eighties.
Debs at the Hope and Anchor, 1979, photo: Rich Gunter
What are some of the most meaningful connections you made back then? Lifelong friends?
Debsey: Almost everyone important in my life I have met through music. Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs first came to see Dolly Mixture support Orange Juice in London in 1982 and instantly became fans. It was their love of Dolly Mixture that eventually led to me joining the Saint Etienne live set up where I met Paul and we formed our own band Birdie and ended up having children. Hester and Rachel are still two of my closest friends. Amongst others, I am still in contact with Captain Sensible, and some of our original fans. Over 40 years on, Dolly Mixture continues to bring us new fans and friends. It’s incredible to think the band can still have such a positive effect on our lives after all this time.
Anything you feel you may have left out of the book about your story?
Debsey: The original version of the book came in at about 120k words. The final version is around 90k so yes, some stories didn’t make it in but I think the book is probably better for it. From 1981 we were playing over 200 gigs a year and there are only so many times you can talk about touring without repeating yourself. If I started to write the book again now it would probably be completely different, the whole process has been so alien to me and in some ways this feels like a dry run. It’s just impossible to cram everything in, but I can always do another one!
How do you see the band’s legacy now?
Debsey: It would be nice to think that some young people completely unaware of the band might pick up the book or listen to the records and be inspired to do something themselves. I personally would have loved to read a story about an all girl band when I was a teenager.
Is the book available in the US and elsewhere outside the UK?
Debsey: Hopefully a US publisher will pick up the book and take it to a wider audience. At the moment it is available on import from Rough Trade and Monorail Music in Glasgow.
Will you be doing any events?
Debsey: As well as a couple of things in London, I’ve been invited to Monorail in Glasgow and will be in Manchester for the Louder than Words festival in November. I would love to have events in the States, Japan or Europe. In fact anywhere that will have me or we never managed to visit with the band.
Top ten records the Dolly Mixture were listening to while an active band